Bars and restaurants were allowed to reopen for takeaway services instead of delivery only as during the lockdown.
And new rules allowed Italians to visit family members (but not friends) living in the same region, to move across their city, and to practice sporting activities outdoor and in public parks, but alone.
Local media paid wide attention to how people approached this so-called "Phase Two" of the emergency, which Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte and several other authorities have warned will be ever more sensitive than the first phase of the pandemic.
In Milan, Rome, Naples, Florence and Turin, limited rush hours were reported in the early morning.
People were often seen queueing shortly outside bars to buy takeaway espressos and light lunches, while temperature checks were carried out in train stations on passengers traveling for the first time from region to region out of essential reasons -- such as in the first high-speed train that reached southern Naples from northern Milan on early Monday.
The airports of Ciampino in Rome (the second largest in the capital after Fiumicino) and Peretola in Florence (the second largest in Tuscany after Pisa) also resumed their activity on Monday, as announced by the Transport Ministry last Thursday.
Overall, most of the air traffic in Italy stopped when the lockdown entered into force, with the number of passengers dropping by some 85 percent (almost 12 million people) in March, according to Italy's association of airports operators Assaeroporti.
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